Abstract

ABSTRACT Adventititous rooting is essential for the post-embryonic growth of the root apparatus in various species. In Arabidopsis thaliana, adventitious rooting has been reported in some mutants, and auxin seems to be the inducer of the process. The objective of the study was to identify the tissues involved in adventitious rooting in the most commonly used ecotypes for molecular and genetic studies (i.e. Columbia, Wassilewskija and Landsberg erecta) both in the presence and absence of exogenous auxin. Seedlings of the three ecotypes were grown under various conditions. When grown under 16 hours light/day for 11 days, all seedlings showed adventitious roots, both with and without auxin, however, both adventitious and lateral rooting were enhanced by exogenous auxin (2 µM naphthaleneacetic acid). Independently of the presence of auxin and of the ecotype, the hypocotyl pericycle produced adventitious roots directly (i.e., according to the same pattern of lateral root formation by the pericycle cells in the primary root). However, in the presence of auxin, roots of indirect origin also, and mainly, formed and their formation was preceded by the exfoliation of the tissues external to the stele. Exfoliation was caused by cell hypertrophy, separation, and disintegration, which mainly involved the endodermis. At the exfoliation site, the pericycle, with a minor contribution of a few endodermal cells, produced the callus from which indirect roots arose. The finding that adventitious rooting occurs in the absence of auxin (all ecotypes) indicates that this process is part of the normal root apparatus in Arabidopsis, with the hypocotyl pericycle as the target tissue of the process. Exogenous auxin alters adventitious rhizogenesis mainly affecting the endodermis response.

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